Since the original post the drones have become a huge thing. Of course the wars …. eh military operations in Ukraine and Iran play a big role but in Europe for instance, the presence of unidentified drones at airports and military installations has become a major issue. Probably launched from ships in the Russian shadow fleet.
Now help is coming from Australia. Anti-drone weapons are made there that the whole world wants. The company's stock price rose steeply by 400% last year and the firm has now established a European HQ in the Netherlands.
Director Angus Bean of DroneShield did not dare to dream 12 years ago that he would one day make the crossing from Sydney to Amsterdam. Then he worked at an Australian research office and experimented with two other, young technicians for the first time with drones that they wanted to send into the mines for reconnaissance flights. This way, no more people had to descend to do this dangerous work.
They tried everything to get drones to avoid obstacles independently and they succeeded. „My colleague beat wildly around, but the drone went around his arms like a bat. Then I knew: if we can get this done in a few days with this cheap stuff, then armies and security services really have a new worry.”
For years, almost no one believed in DroneShield's story that soldiers had to prepare for a completely different battlefield. Drones were not the problem in the eyes of commanders. They were especially concerned about new tanks and rockets. How different the world has looked since the war in Ukraine. Drones are not a side issue, but a main thing to be decisive in the fight. The highest generals in the Dutch army also realize this. This week, a completely new drone unit will even be established at the army.
Soldiers will be allowed to buy new stuff for tens of millions of euros in the coming years and it is no coincidence that DroneShield is opening an office in the Netherlands right now. The company hopes to attract a large part of those orders.
Also from other countries, by the way. Since the incidents with mysterious drones at airports across Europe, NATO has announced that it wants to set up a drone wall along the entire eastern border with Russia.
DroneShield can certainly help with that, the Australians think. In the Amsterdam office, Bean shows how. For example, patrolling soldiers carry a small device in their chest pocket, which warns them if there are drones nearby. A comrade then grabs a weapon that does not fire bullets, but can disturb the drone with radio waves. Similar, larger systems can be set up at command posts, barracks or around air bases.
Source: compilation multiple newspapers